Fulfilling final wishes

Expanding digital assets

Locating personal accounts

Introducing DCS,the first and only estate management solution assisting attorneys and personal representatives organize and contact personal accounts to fulfill an individual’s final wishes.

On April 18th and 19th, nearly seventy clients and colleagues of the Strauss Attorneys PLLC estate planning law firm in Hendersonville, North Carolina gathered for the firm’s annual Successor Trustee Seminars. One of the topics addressed was digital estate planning, with special guest speaker DCS’s Lee Poskanzer. Click here to learn more about the program and his presentation. .

DCS provides emotional relief for loved ones at their most vulnerable time.

Eliminate the unnecessary burden for loved ones and personal representatives of locating and dealing with an estate’s account assets. Hidden or forgotten accounts, many online, can waste not only time and money but have the potential to leave an estate vulnerable to ID fraud. These accounts, when left open, often contribute to years of continued reminders and emotional anxiety.

Your estate attorney can provide relief. Include DCS as part of your estate plan to provide secure, password-free organization of both digital and traditional accounts. When the time comes, notification of an individual’s final wishes is provided which may include account deletion, transference, memorialization or other instruction. DCS helps your estate attorney and personal representatives ensure that hidden accounts don’t surface and undo the careful management, both emotional and financial, put into preparing an estate.

How the DCS process works in three simple steps:

ENROLL

Enroll through your estate planning attorney. A simple customized profile is created in the DCS database.

CAPTURE

Accounts, digital and off-line, are captured and stored securely in the DCS database. Institution-specific data is entered without passwords.

NOTIFY

Upon activation, DCS takes care of notifying accounts and requesting implementation of final wishes which may include deletion, transference, memorialization or other instruction.